The Southern Poverty Law Center built its brand on fighting hate groups. Donors gave it more than $100 million a year because they believed the SPLC was destroying the KKK, the neo-Nazis, the Aryan Nations. But… a new federal indictment says the SPLC quietly funneled about $4.1 million in donor money to the super-pale leaders it was publicly attacking. (Doug Ross)
the most explosive allegations in this indictment against the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) are not simply financial irregularities—they amount to accusations of a long-running scheme to secretly funnel donor money to leaders of white supremacist, neo-Nazi, and Ku Klux Klan organizations while publicly fundraising off opposition to those same groups.
Both the national president of the American Front and the Imperial Wizard of the United Klan were allegedly on the SPLC payroll.
The Federalist; the most extraordinary allegation in the superseding indictment filed Tuesday by federal prosecutors against the Southern Poverty Law Center demands a screenshot so you can see it with your own eyes. In the indictment, people labeled with the letter F and a number are members of extremist organizations who were allegedly funded by the SPLC, so F-31 and F-32 are alleged members of the Ku Klux Klan:

Demand for racism in America far exceeds supply so the supply of racism had to be created by Leftists.
Grow Existing Chapters of Extremist Groups.
Create New Chapters of Extremist Groups.
ADVERTISEMENTThe SPLC and other Leftist groups did this.
This is terrorism.” (C3)
SPLC was the hate group the whole time:
Charlottesville
KKK
Cross burning
Nazis https://t.co/RtlGKkGsUv— Dr. Interracial 🇺🇸 (@billysandytodd) June 3, 2026
The SPLC invested $270,000 in the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville.
They then used the racism and hate they created to fundraise.
Their $51 million in revenue went to $133 million in revenue after the event they created.
A 161% increase.
The SPLC needs to be ruined.
— C3 (@C_3C_3) June 4, 2026
Biggest Allegation: SPLC Secretly Funded Extremist Leaders
The indictment alleges that between roughly 2010 and 2023, SPLC secretly routed approximately $4.1 million in donor funds through a network of allegedly fictitious entities and bank accounts to individuals identified as leaders or members of extremist organizations.
According to the indictment, donor money was allegedly used to:
- Recruit new members into extremist groups
- Expand extremist organizations
- Fund rallies and events
- Purchase materials for cross burnings
- Buy materials for KKK robes and hoods
- Produce racist propaganda
- Pay the personal living expenses of extremist leaders
The indictment claims donors were told their money would help fight or dismantle extremist groups while portions were allegedly being used to support them.
Alleged Shell Companies and Secret Accounts
The indictment claims SPLC employees created or operated a network of fake entities, including:
- Center Investigative Agency (CIA)
- Fox Photography
- North West Technologies
- Tech Writers Group
- Rare Books Warehouse
- Imagery Ink
- J&J Electronics
- Kelly’s Marine
- Turner Personnel
The indictment explicitly alleges these entities:
“were never incorporated, had no bona fide employees, and conducted no legitimate business.”
Prosecutors allege these accounts were used to conceal payments and move donor money.
Alleged Payments to Extremist Figures
Among the most politically explosive allegations:
F-42 (Former Chairman of the National Alliance)
The indictment alleges SPLC secretly paid him more than $155,000 while simultaneously featuring him on SPLC’s “Extremist File” webpage and soliciting donations to oppose him.
F-37
The indictment alleges SPLC secretly paid him more than $300,000.
The indictment further alleges he participated in leadership activities connected to the movement surrounding the 2017 Charlottesville “Unite the Right” rally and that SPLC continued funding him while publicly covering the movement.
F-27
The indictment alleges SPLC secretly paid him more than $350,000 through hidden accounts and pay cards.
F-43
The indictment alleges SPLC secretly paid more than $19,000 to a convicted felon and reported leader of the American Front.
F-18
The indictment alleges SPLC secretly paid a former Imperial Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan while simultaneously publishing material condemning his organization.
Alleged Bank Fraud and False Documents
The indictment claims SPLC employees submitted false banking documents identifying employees as sole proprietors of various businesses that allegedly did not actually operate.
Bank records allegedly showed accounts opened under names such as:
- Center Investigative Agency
- Fox Photography
- North West Technologies
- Tech Writers Group
The indictment states the accounts were later closed after internal bank scrutiny.
Wire Fraud Charges
Counts One through Six charge wire fraud.
The theory is that SPLC allegedly obtained donations through material misrepresentations by telling donors their money would combat extremist groups while secretly diverting funds to individuals associated with those groups.
Money Laundering Charge
Count Eleven alleges Conspiracy to Commit Concealment Money Laundering.
Prosecutors claim SPLC used the shell entities and layered bank transfers to disguise the origin and destination of donor funds.
Asset Forfeiture
The forfeiture section seeks seizure of:
- Property involved in the alleged offenses
- Property traceable to the alleged offenses
- Substitute assets if the original assets cannot be located
Why These Allegations Are So Significant
If proven, the indictment alleges a remarkable contradiction:
- SPLC publicly raised money by portraying itself as fighting extremist organizations.
- SPLC allegedly used hidden accounts and shell entities to channel millions of dollars to individuals connected to those same organizations.
- SPLC allegedly concealed those payments from donors, banks, and regulators.
Those are the core allegations that make this indictment so explosive: wire fraud, money laundering, shell companies, secret payments to extremist leaders, and alleged misuse of donor funds on a multimillion-dollar scale.
🚨READ IT
The Justice Department just secured a superseding indictment against the Southern Poverty Law Center, and it reveals some new bombshells
🧵1/20https://t.co/uRCbnWaBzr pic.twitter.com/AxORRKq7MC
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026

IN BED WITH NEO-NAZI: New Indictment Exposes Leftist Group’s Scandalous Relationships With White Nationalists
By: Tyler O’Neil, Daily Signal, June 3, 2026
The Justice Department’s superseding indictment against the Southern Poverty Law Center claims the SPLC paid people to stay in the KKK when they wanted to leave the movement.
The Southern Poverty Law Center allegedly paid at least three people who wanted to leave the white supremacist movement not to do so, according to the Justice Department’s superseding indictment handed down Tuesday.
A federal grand jury in April had indicted the SPLC on charges of wire fraud, bank fraud, and conspiracy to conceal money laundering. The SPLC has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
While the organization “purports to fight white supremacy and racial hatred,” acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a press conference that “the SPLC was not dismantling these groups. It was instead manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose.”
The charges revolve around the SPLC’s program paying “field sources” inside white supremacist groups, such as the Ku Klux Klan and neo-Nazi groups. The organization has maintained that it paid these informants in order to alert law enforcement to extremist violence before it happened, and some of the informants’ information did lead to prosecutions.
However, the indictment claims some of the SPLC money actually went to prop up the organizations—and the superseding indictment reveals more details of the allegations.
Where Did the SPLC Money Go?The superseding indictment alleges that the “field sources” used the money from the Southern Poverty Law Center to grow extremist groups.
Field sources used the money to attend and host “extremist group rallies”; grow and create “new chapters of extremist groups”; recruit new members; donate to extremist group leaders; “purchase materials for cross burnings; purchase materials to make Ku Klux Klan robes and hoods”; and more.
One of the field sources, identified as “F-9,” reportedly had a romantic relationship with an SPLC employee. F-9 infiltrated the neo-Nazi organization National Alliance and received $140,000 from the SPLC. F-9 shared bank accounts with the SPLC employee, who used the cash to pay for the couple’s personal living expenses.
The superseding indictment alleges that the SPLC not only paid white supremacist leaders and members, but actually convinced them to stay in the extremist groups when they tried to leave the movement.
The field source identified as F-30, who led the National Socialist Party of America, was a member of the Ku Klux Klan and led a faction of the Aryan Nations that had chapters in approximately 17 states, reached out to the SPLC while “seeking to get out of the white nationalist movement.”
An SPLC employee “offered F-30 a monthly salary of approximately $2,500.00 in addition to payment of expenses to continue to lead and maintain the violent extremist organization F-30 told the SPLC employee he wanted to leave,” according to the superseding indictment.
The SPLC used the shell company Rare Books to pay F-30 more than $70,000 in donor funds between 2010 and 2016, according to the indictment.
“F-30 used donors’ money to, among other things, travel to extremist rallies, host extremist rallies, donate money to leaders of other extremist organizations, recruit new members into his extremist organization, publish racist and extremist material for the purpose of recruiting new members, … and create racist paraphernalia to sell at rallies to raise money for his extremist organization,” the indictment states. “This was known to certain employees as they continued to secretly funnel donors’ money to F-30.”
Two more “field sources,” identified as F-31 and F-32, were members of a Ku Klux Klan organization who “feared for their safety from other Klan members and wanted out of the movement.” They reached out to the SPLC after seeing news reports about the center helping another person leave an extremist group.
“Despite their requests for help getting out of the movement, an SPLC employee encouraged F-31 and F-32 to stay in the movement and offered to pay them a $1,200.00 monthly salary as well as pay for expenses as incurred,” the indictment recounts. “Once they were financially backed by the SPLC to do so, F-31 and F-32 agreed to remain in the movement.”
The SPLC employee directed these field sources to falsely state they received the money for helping college students write and research essays, the indictment claims. Using this money, F-31 and F-32 “attended extremist group rallies in multiple states,” and the activity led F-31 to rise to “a leadership role within an extremist group.” In that role, “F-31 actively recruited new members using donors’ money.”
“F-32 also participated in recruiting new members using donors’ money,” the indictment adds. “In addition, an SPLC employee knew that F-32 used donors’ money to purchase material to make Ku Klux Klan garments for others.” The SPLC also allegedly reimbursed these field sources for the expenses they incurred for cross-burning events.
Forfeiture
The superseding indictment also includes forfeiture allegations. The document states that, if the SPLC is convicted of the wire fraud or conspiracy counts, it will “forfeit to the United States … property, real or personal, which represents or is traceable to the gross receipts obtained” in violating the law.SPLC interim CEO Bryan Fair will testify before the House Judiciary Committee next week.
🚨READ IT
The Justice Department just secured a superseding indictment against the Southern Poverty Law Center, and it reveals some new bombshells
🧵1/20https://t.co/uRCbnWaBzr pic.twitter.com/AxORRKq7MC
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
Yet the field sources used the SPLC's $ to:
1⃣Attend extremist rallies
2⃣Host rallies
3⃣Grow existing chapters
4⃣Create new chapters
5⃣Recruit individuals
6⃣Donate to extremist leaders
7⃣Purchase cross-burning material
8⃣Create racist paraphernalia
9⃣Pay living expenses🧵3/20 pic.twitter.com/SeG9iTxxQY
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
The SPLC set up ficitious entities to fund these "field sources."
🧵4/20 pic.twitter.com/YF8mUs6DWl
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
1⃣NATIONAL ALLIANCE
SPLC paid over $1.2M to "F-9," who was in a romantic relationship with an SPLC employee😲
While receiving SPLC donors' money, F-9 also raised funds for the National Alliance.
🧵5/20 pic.twitter.com/nKQnEuWoIf
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
2⃣NAZI-KKK LEADER
SPLC paid more than $70K to F-30, a NAZI, KKK, and Aryan Nations leader. F-30 asked SPLC to help him/her leave the movement. SPLC gave F-30 a salary to stay. F-30 used the $ to host extremist rallies, recruit members, publish material.
🧵6/20 pic.twitter.com/oallwNm05F
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
3⃣KKK GETS COLD FEET
F-30 wasn't the only one. F-31 & F-32, KKK members, wanted out in 2010.
The SPLC bribed them to stay in the movement. These Fs used the $ to attend extremist rallies and to gain a leadership role.
SPLC reimbursed them for cross-burning materials.
🧵7/20 pic.twitter.com/1MSmnUbTnr
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
4⃣NEO-NAZI FEATURED
SPLC gave $155K+ to F-42, former chairman of the Neo-Nazi National Alliance. At the same time, SPLC featured this field source on its "Extremist File" webpage.
🧵8/20 pic.twitter.com/9caN460avP
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
5⃣UNITE THE RIGHT
F-37, a member of the leadership chat for the Charlottesville rally in 2017, made racist posts under an SPLC employee's supervision and arranged transport for others to attend the rally. SPLC paid this person $300K.
🧵9/20 pic.twitter.com/judYfkBjyY
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
6⃣NAZI
The SPLC paid $350K to an officer of the National Socialist Movement and Aryan Nations-affiliated Sadistic Souls Motorcycle Club.
🧵10/20 pic.twitter.com/W9RJWoFgbO
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
7⃣AMERICAN FRONT
The SPLC paid F-43 $19K. This person was national president of American Front, and is a convicted felon for participating in a cross burning.
🧵11/20 pic.twitter.com/YacKaLGkGX
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
8⃣UNITED KLANS OF AMERICA
The SPLC paid F-18, who led "a millennial reboot of what was once a serious domestic threat."
🧵12/20 pic.twitter.com/O6CVzDGXmg
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
WIRE FRAUD
The indictment mentions specific payments SPLC allegedly made under false pretenses. The indictment claims SPLC aimed "to obtain money via donations through materially false representations and omissions about what the donated funds would be used for."
🧵13/20 pic.twitter.com/7IIEPZdQB2
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
The indictment also brings bank fraud charges, mentioning specific statements an SPLC employee made to a bank that later conflicted with the SPLC CEO's statements to the bank.
🧵14/20 pic.twitter.com/vVzFDuFtfN
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
Finally, the indictment claims the SPLC conspired to commit concealement money laundering, aiming to conceal "the true nature, source, ownership, and control of fraudulently obtained donated money the SPLC paid to the Fs."
🧵15/20 pic.twitter.com/bj7eZzTZEN
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
The indictment states that, upon conviction of the wire fraud counts, the SPLC "shall forfeit to the United States… any property, real or personal, which represents or istraceable to the gross receipts obtained" in violation of the law.
🧵16/20 pic.twitter.com/FWUMh7Bq1k
— Tyler O'Neil (@Tyler2ONeil) June 3, 2026
https://twitter.com/Tyler2ONeil/status/2062196087771869407?s=20
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